27 August - 2 September 1917

There was a breath of autumn already in the sky. The unforgettable summer was ending, and the sun set early in the sea. We could not sufficiently admire our marvellous Petersburg.
27 August
Memoir by the Menshevik Nikolai Sukhanov
Sunday, August 27th, marked the end of six months of revolution.
It was a rather wretched jubilee … I went to the Petersburg Side to the Cirque Moderne, where Lunacharsky was
giving a lecture on Greek art. A huge working-class audience was listening with
great interest to the popular speaker and his unfamiliar stories. … The two of
us … wandered about the streets and quays for a long time, talking about
aesthetics and ‘culture’ … There was a breath of autumn already in the sky. The
unforgettable summer was ending, and the sun set early in the sea. We could not
sufficiently admire our marvellous Petersburg … The phone rang. Someone from
Smolny: …’Kornilov is moving on Petersburg with troops from the front. He’s got
an army corps. Things are being organized here…’ I dropped the receiver. In two
minutes Lunacharsky and I had already left for Smolny.
(N.N. Sukhanov, The Russian Revolution 1917: a Personal Record
, Oxford 1955)
At a hasty cabinet meeting, [Kerensky] read out the
transcript ‘proving’ Kornilov’s ‘treachery’. He demanded the astonished
ministers grant him unlimited authority against the coming danger. The Kadets,
deeply imbricated with the Kornilovite milieu, objected, but the majority gave
Kerensky a free hand. They resigned as he requested, remaining only in
caretaker capacities. Thus, at 4am on 27 August, the Second Coalition ended.
(China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
28 August
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
Last night I was called to the Embassy by telephone, with
the news that General Kornilov had announced the fall of the provisional
government and was marching on Petrograd … the facts of the situation [are
these]: Kornilov had informed Kerensky through the intermediary of M. Lvov,
that in view of the danger which threatened the country, he had decided to take
over as dictator, and that he was offering him the office of Minister of
Justice in the new government. Naturally, the vain and sensual petty lawyer,
who believes himself to be the master of Russia because he sleeps in the
Emperor’s bed, could not resign himself to taking his hand out of the till: he
answered by having M. Lvov arrested and declaring Kornilov ‘a traitor to the
fatherland’.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
29 August
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the American Embassy, Petrograd
Rumour has it that many regiments are going over to Kornilov
and that he is not far beyond Tsarskoye. It is undoubtedly the fact that the
‘counter-revolutionists’, or monarchists, are on his side too. Heavy
detachments of troops in Champs de Mars.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
Report during a journey along the Volga river by Manchester Guardian
correspondent
‘I say there is no hope for Russia till we have a dictator
who can discipline these dogs, and stop all this anarchy,’ said a man in a
general’s uniform to his neighbour, a well-dressed civilian. Both were sitting
at a mahogany table, taking coffee and rolls. ‘Oh, yes, that’s quite true,’
said the civilian. ‘Before the Revolution the peasants on our estate used to
work well, but then, of course, you always had to be there with the threat of
force to drive them; I suppose it is just the same with the soldiers.’
(M. Philips Price, My Reminiscences of the Russian Revolution
,
London 1921)
Report in The Times
It is clear that such power as exists in Russia resides not
in the Provisional Government, but in the self-constituted and irresponsible
committees which have obtained control over the simple soldiery … The news of
the internal strife in Russia will be received with profound sorrow in this
country. The saddest feature of the situation is that M. Kerensky and General
Korniloff are both patriots, and both have the welfare of Russia deeply at
heart … In six months the Russian Army has been stripped of its generals as one
strips an artichoke, although many of them … were as ardent in support of the
Revolution as M. Kerensky himself.
( The Times
, 29 August (11 September) 1917)
30 August
Report in The Times
Russia is at the point of civil war. Troops supporting
General Korniloff have moved on Petrograd, and, in order to delay them,
supporters of M. Kerensky and the Provisional Government are destroying the
railway lines converging on the capital. The ‘Savage Division’, once commanded
by Korniloff, are reported 30 miles from Petrograd.
( The Times
, 30 August (12 September) 1917)
Here to meet them … were scores of emissaries. They came
from the Committee for Struggle, from district soviets, from factories,
garrisons, Tsentroflot, from the Naval Committee, the Second Baltic Crew. And
locals had come too. All stamping across the scrub and through the trees
towards that wheezing train. They came with agitation in mind. They came to beg
the Savage Division to resist being used for counterrevolution.
(China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
Letter to the Editor
Sir, As a personal friend of General Korniloff … may I thank you
for your leading article of this morning’s date? Those who label General
Korniloff as a traitor to his country are traitors themselves … As an
individual, he has a strong personality – the personality of a Cossack … I said
at that moment [Revolution], and I say again today, that Russia will be saved
by a strong, clean, straightforward individual, unswerved by all petty, passing
passions which temporarily influence the emotional mind. Such a man is General
Korniloff.
Yours very truly, Marjorie Colt Lethbridge, 15 Cambridge
Terrace, Hyde Park
( The Times
, 30 August (12 September) 1917)
31 August
Letter to the Editor
Sir, A letter in your yesterday’s issue from Mrs Lethbridge
appears to suggest that General Korniloff is the sole patriot in Russia at the
present moment. The fact is that so far as genuine patriotism … is concerned,
there is absolutely no choice to be made between Korniloff and Kerensky … The
truth is that Kerensky and Korniloff are equally necessary for the salvation of
Russia. Each is incomplete without the other. They are two utterly unselfish
men both striving for the same goal, but along different paths.
Yours, Paul Dukes, 2 Bethune Avenue, Friern Barnet
( The Times
, 31 August (13 September) 1917)
Diary entry of an anonymous Englishman
It is all over! Kornilov has failed. How it happened we
don’t know yet, but today he is to be brought to Petrograd under arrest. If he
had succeeded – as he ought to have done, once he had embarked on so important
an undertaking – we should have had order restored … The failure of Kornilov
has completely knocked me over, and yesterday I could not walk. I still foresee
an ocean of blood before order comes.
(The Russian Diary of an Englishman, Petrograd 1915-1917
, New York 1919)
1 September
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the American Embassy, Petrograd
Anarchy seems to stalk in the streets, for not only has the
government given the workmen arms in the recent trouble (about 40,000) but the
Soviet of Workmen and Soldiers’ Deputies informed the ministry last night that
they wished no Kadets in the ministry. Sober sense cannot but see complete
demoralization in the army and serious trouble in this city.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
2 September
Memoir of Fedor Raskolnikov, naval cadet at Kronstadt
The ‘Kornilov days’ constituted a Rubicon after which our
Party grew so strong that it was soon able to put on the agenda the decisive
proletarian attack. The Party’s standing among the workers increased with
fantastic speed. The very word ‘Bolshevik’, which after the July days had been
a swear-word, was now transformed into a synonym for an honest revolutionary,
the only dependable friend of the workers and peasants.
(F.F. Raskolnikov, Kronstadt and Petrograd in 1917
, New York 1982, first published 1925)
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2 September 2017
In his memoir, Kerensky describes the defeat of Kornilov in pyrrhic terms: ‘The first
news of the approach of general Kornilov’s troops had much the same effect on
the people of Petrograd as a lighted match on a powder keg. Soldiers, sailors,
and workers were all seized with a sudden fit of paranoid suspicion. They
fancied they saw counterrevolution everywhere. Panic-stricken that they might
lose the rights they had only just gained, they vented their rage against all
the generals, landed proprietors, bankers and other “bourgeois” groups.’ The
resistance to Kornilov was led by the Bolsheviks with a momentum that carried them through to October. Lenin had demanded renewed radicalism: ‘Now is
the time for action; the
war against Kornilov must be conducted in a revolutionary way, by drawing the
masses in, by arousing them, by inflaming them (Kerensky is afraid of the masses, afraid of the people).’ As
for Kornilov, with his fellow conspirators he escaped from prison in November
1917 and became military commander of the anti-Bolshevik Volunteer Army. He was
killed by a Soviet shell in April 1918.
